Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Leif Persson 's 500 KTM

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In 1978 Leif Persson began his work at the Husqvarna Factory in the R&D Department.
He was part of the design team for the Husqvarna 390 and 420 Automatics as well as
the Husqvarna 430 and 488.


He became the Swedish 500cc Champion in 1980 riding a Husqvarna 420 that had been modified for him at the Husqvarna Development Department.

This 1988 KTM 500 was Leif's last factory ride. The inner motor cases on this bike are sand cast, the cylinder ported and the suspension has been re-worked to Leif's
specifications. He placed 17th in the 500cc World Championships. Eric Geboers won
the Championship that year aboard a factory Honda.










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Sunday, August 29, 2010

The Sunday Movie

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Catalina Grand Prix Motorcycle Races



Throughout the 50's, the Catalina Grand Prix was one of the premier motorcycle races in the U.S. Once a year boats loaded with bikes crossed the channel to the small island off the California coast. Triumphs, Matchlesses, and BSA's took on the 10 mile course that ran through city streets, up into the hills, and through a golf course before heading back into Avalon to streets lined with screaming fans. This event made its mark in history and produced many stars. The Catalina Grand Prix glory days were way too short but oh so sweet.




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Friday, August 27, 2010

Blalock, vintage motorcycle

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By Bill Walsh
Special to the Rappahannock News
If all goes according to plan, Bill Blalock will finally get to ride a motorcycle he owned for many years without ever having cranked up the engine.

That motorcycle is one of about 80 entered in this fall’s Motorcycle Cannonball, a 17-day race from Kitty Hawk, N.C., to Santa Monica, Cal.

Blalock with the restored bike.

Blalock bought the badly neglected 1913 Excelsior in 1952 from the Washington, D.C. family of its one-time owner. That owner, a part-time racing enthusiast, had been living in a nursing home for a few years, and the bike had sat in the basement, neglected, for a number of years, Blalock said.

“[A sister] really didn’t know what it was worth and didn’t really want any money,” Blalock recalled of the purchase, and he can’t remember what he paid for it.


“It was sitting in a basement, and had been sitting there long enough that the rear stand was almost rotted off,” he said. “It was a mess.”

Blalock, founder of Blalock Cycle Co., originally in Silver Spring, Md., before its 1984 move to its present location at 170 Lee Highway in Warrenton, took it back to his shop.

“I got married in ’55, and we had a child in ’56,” Blalock recalled. “I had taken it apart and it was sitting around in boxes,” and with a demanding business and a growing family, he didn’t have much time to work on it.

His original plan was to restore the bike and ride it.

“Usually, there are a lot of parts missing,” in a project like this, Blalock said.


“I had to re-make the rear stand. The pedals were completely worn out, but you just unscrew those, just like a bicycle. I replaced the chain with Diamond chain, which is still in business today; I was able to get the same chains that were on there. The seat . . . I was able to restore the leather on it. The gas tank had pinholes all through it, but there is a chemical that you put in as a liquid and it dries and becomes a plastic-like material... read more




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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Carey Loftin

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Arguably Hollywood's greatest ever stunt rider/driver, Carey Loftin's amazing stunt skills were utilized in hundreds of Hollywood productions over a period of 50 years. Loftin began his stunt career as a member of a traveling motorcycle stunt show in the early 1930s when he was 19.


William Carey Loftin was born on January 31, 1914 in Blountstown, Florida. The son of a preacher, Carey grew up Alabama and Mississippi. He went to high school in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He began riding when he was 10 when he borrowed an old strap-drive Excelsior from a local blacksmith and proceeded to plow up a farm field with his face. In spite of such discouragement, the young Loftin continued to ride whenever he could get his hands on a machine.

The first motorcycle he owned was an antique 37-cubic-inch Indian single-cylinder that cost him the grand sum of $10.


“It was just about worth $10,” Loftin said in a 1953 interview with Cycle magazine. “There was a gutless wonder if you ever saw one. It was humiliating. Every cycle in town ran away from it, but it made a mechanic out of me.”

The piston in Loftin’s old Indian was so loose that it rattled around in the barrel and finally cracked. It was the luckiest thing that could have happened. Carey didn’t have the money to buy a new piston so he went to a junkyard to find an old car piston that looked like it would fit. When he installed it he found the car piston too tall. With youthful ingenuity he promptly filed the top off and ended up with a domed piston.


When he reassembled the bike he found the motor was unbelievably strong. His little hand-ground piston turned his clinker Indian into a bike that was so fast no one in town could catch it.

An athletic kid, Carey wasn’t content to merely ride his motorcycle. He learned to do acrobatic stunts while riding. He impressed his friends with his antics and continually pushed himself to do more difficult stunts.

In 1933, a motorcycle stunt showman named Skip Fordyce brought his barnstorming show to Hattiesburg. After Fordyce performed, one of the onlookers blurted out, “I can do anything you can do.” Fordyce looked over his shoulder and saw a long, lean, hungry looking boy who, at first glance, didn’t look like anything special. It was Loftin.


“Show me,” Skip said. With that Loftin disappeared. Skip continued talking with the crowd of onlookers, thinking he had called the kid’s bluff. Suddenly the kid roared back onto the field on his ancient cycle. Skip found himself watching a very solid performance as the kid reeled off a series of side stands and seat stands. Then the kid began bouncing on the seat, his feet landing in a different position with every jump. Then he bounced around and rode backwards. Then he turned the bike around and headed back toward the crowd. Skip could sense that this was to be the grand finale so he watched carefully. Suddenly the kid began jumping up and down on the seat and then unexpectedly he launched himself in the air, his body doing a complete flip and landing with his feet on the ground behind the speeding bike and holding on to the rear seat with his hands. He was steering the bike with his feet by digging in one shoe or the other. As the cycle neared Skip and the crowd on onlookers, the kid snapped forward, popped up over the rear wheel and onto the seat before coming to a perfect stop.


Fordyce hired the kid on the spot.

Loftin rode for various stunt shows in the 1930s, supporting himself during the Depression. During off times, he supplemented his income by working as a motorcycle mechanic.

“In one stunt act I was a flop man,” Loftin recalled. “The show advertised that showgoers would get to see a rider jump off a motorcycle going 60 miles per hour. If it wasn’t going at least 60 mph they were guaranteed to get their money back.”


After a stint in the Marine Corps, Loftin moved to Los Angeles in the late 1930s and took a job as a mechanic. He quickly broke into movie stunt work. Loftin's expertise with motor vehicles, including cars, trucks and motorcycles, gave him the chance to contribute his skills to numerous films from the late 1930s until he retired in the early 1990s... Read more at the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame




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Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Gordon Osmundson Photographs'

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If you are a vintage aircraft lover you must go there and visit this fabulous page of Gordon Osmundson this photographer is great and knows how to shoot the best from those fabulous classic planes

RAF Mustang, Stead Air Force Base, Reno, Nevada, 2000

Open Cockpit, P51d, Stead Air Force Base, Reno, Nevada, 2000

Mustang #3, Stead Air Force Base, Reno, Nevada, 1999

P51d, Planes of Fame, Chino, California, 1999

1735 Horsepower, Stead Air Force Base, Reno, Nevada, 1999

all pictures copyrighted Gordon Osmundson

Cars, trains and, well, planes. It sounds simple enough, but while the photography of, first trains, and then automobiles came to me as the natural outgrowth of my interest in and experience with those subjects, the photography of aircraft came from a different source. Having photos of cars and trains, I began having art consultants ask me if I had anything on airplanes, but unfortunately at that time, I did not.





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Monday, August 23, 2010

Festival of Jurby

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By: John Gregory via : www.isleofman.com



Thousands of motorcycle enthusiasts and families are expected to descend on Jurby Airfield this Sunday (August 29) for the Festival of Jurby.
Last year marked the inaugural festival which attracted more than 8,000 visitors and featured vintage motorcycles and other vehicles as well as attractions for all the family. It was the biggest single spectator attraction of the year.
This year the organisers are predicting in excess of 10,000 people attending the festival and have completely revamped the event to cope with the huge numbers.

It has been organised by the Isle of Man Vintage Motorcycle Club.
Secretary of the club Tony East said: "We were completely overwhelmed by the number of people last year."We thought we might attract a couple of thousand visitors if we were lucky, but we totally under-estimated how popular the event would be."
The events committee of the VMCC Isle of Man came up with the idea of holding a gathering similar to the well established VMCC Festival of 1,000 Bikes held annually at Mallory Park.

Tony added: "We were well organised and we had lots of exhibitors and an enthusiastic group of people at VMCC who worked hard and who believed in the festival, but the number of people who arrived was just amazing... Read more







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Friday, August 20, 2010

Mods vs. Rockers bike rally

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By Kimberlee Love via : www.post-gazette.com


When Larry Fletcher organized Chicago's first Mods vs. Rockers bike and scooter rally in 2005 he had a wealth of experience from which to draw. Mr. Fletcher, a beer importer and vintage bike enthusiast, had organized The Brighton Bash, a vintage bike event, at his Ace Cafe Chicago in 1997, and he continued to organize vintage bike shows and ride-ins with the 59 Club Chicago throughout the next several years.


When Laura Pliskin, a freelance art department coordinator from Pittsburgh, decided to organize Pittsburgh's first Rockers vs. Mods event (Mods vs. Rockers and Rockers vs. Mods are used somewhat interchangeably) she had no experience whatsoever. What she did have was enthusiasm for the vintage bike scene -- and for Mods and Rockers culture.


Ms. Pliskin was first exposed to British Mods and Rockers online -- Mods being tidy skinny-tie, suit-jacketed scooter riders, and Rockers being rather less tidy leather-jacketed motorcyclists, so named for their love of American rock 'n' roll. Reaching their heyday in 1960s Britain, Mods and Rockers gained notoriety after several well-publicized -- some say well-exploited -- brawls were reported by the hungry British press. Ms. Pliskin devoured everything she could read about them on the Web and remembers thinking, "How amazing to have been alive during that time, when two of motorcycling's subcultures were so dedicated to their passions."


After finding that Mods vs. Rockers events were cropping up around the country, she wondered, "Pittsburgh has the vintage bike culture, so why not have an event here?" She was already a legend in her social circle for organizing outrageous theme parties, but she knew it would take more than the idea to make an event happen. Fate stepped in when a co-worker remarked that his girlfriend, Nicole White, was starting a party planning business. The two women met and bonded instantly.

Ms. Pliskin is a motorcyclist -- she rides a 1969 Honda CB350 -- and is the self-described "idea man" of the duo. Ms. White doesn't ride, and is the more grounded of the two. Ms. Pliskin says Ms. White has been instrumental in organizing the nuts and bolts of Rockers vs. Mods Pittsburgh, securing such necessities as insurance coverage... Read more

Rockers vs. Mods

Where: SouthSide Works parking lot.

When: 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday.

Information: steelcityrockersvsmods.com






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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Sturgis Motorcycle Museum & Hall of Fame

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The Sturgis Motorcycle Museum & Hall of Fame inducted seven new members Wednesday, and officials announced they will begin an effort to expand the museum, which they said is bursting at the seams.
About 400 people attended the annual Hall of Fame induction breakfast at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center.Inductees to the Hall of Fame are selected for significant contributions to the sport and lifestyle of motorcycling.


Inductees are:

Roger Schieman of Sturgis, who received the Founders Award along with his induction. Schieman is a long-time member of the Jackpine Gypsies and was instrumental in producing races in Sturgis, especially during the rally. He was a founding partner and board member of the current motorcycle museum and its predecessor.


Ronald McKinley of Sioux Falls, who was recognized for his advocacy for motorcycle safety during his time with the Highway Patrol and since his retirement in 1991.


Nancy Davidson of Milwaukee, the wife of longtime Harley-Davidson design executive Willie G. Davidson, who was selected for her long advocacy on behalf of motorcycling and women riders.


Betsy Lister of Medford, Mass., a longtime rider, who founded two Web sites that provide information about rallies, rides and biker rights.


Stan Simpson of Cibolo, Texas, chairman of the American Motorcyclist Association, who has been instrumental in refocusing the organization on its original mission of advocacy for motorcyclists’ rights.



"Kiwi” Mike Tomas of Riverside, Calif., founder of Kiwi Indian Motorcycle Co., who is widely recognized as one of the most knowledgeable experts on classic Indian motorcycles. His company manufactures updated models of motorcycles that pay tribute to the classic Indian bikes.

Sonny Bridges, LaGrange, Maine, who received the 2010 Freedom Fighters Hall of Fame Award, along with his induction. Bridges headed an effort to repeal Maine’s mandatory helmet law in the early 1970s. He also served as president of the United Bikers of Maine, a motorcycle advocacy group... Read more





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Tuesday, August 17, 2010

The Way It really was

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via : www.hotrodrevival.com

An incredible collection of Nostalgic Bonneville, Drag Racing, Dry Lakes and California Hot Rodding photos. Just a small sampling of the never before seen footage, photos, interviews and sounds on The Dreams of Legends' new DVD 'The Way it Really Was'.

The Movie that you've been waiting for is here. The Dreams of Legends presents:

'The Way It REALLY Was'


65 years in the making, from Ed Winfield to Al Teague, Tony Waters, Don Garlits, Nolan White, Ed Iskenderian, Billy Frontuto, Vic Colvin, the Markley Bros., John Edmunds, Hayden Proffitt, Charlie Hamilton, Rick White, Mike Cook, Ed Winfield, Mickey Thompson, Gene Winfield, Don Long, Freddie Lobello, Russ Eyers, Rich Richards, Gary Richards, Joaquin Arnett & the Bean Bandits ...


... the San Diego Roadster Club, Julio Hernandez, Nick Arias, Stormin' Norman Weekly, Bob Herda, Harry Hoffman, the Smokers, Ernie Murashige & the M&V Speed Shop, Gray Baskerville, Paul Hornung and many, many more stories that you never even knew existed, until now!



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Monday, August 16, 2010

A 1973 works Yamaha 250

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Featured here is a 1973 works Yamaha 250. The bike was recovered in Sweden and
later restored in the United States.


This bike is believed to have been raced by Hakan Andersson during the first two
races of the 1973 GP Season.


The works motors for 1973 used an all new crank case design made from sand cast
magnesium and featured a new style clutch actuating arm that went through the top
of the cases.


The front and rear wheels are sand cast magnesium as is upper triple clamp. The lower clamp is machined aluminum and the fasteners are titanium. The fuel tank is a hand formed aluminum high capacity tank.
The rear "thermal flow" shocks, still under development, were sand cast in magnesium. The front forks are hand made except for the sliders which are cast aluminum. The fork legs are knurled where they make contact with the triple clamps. Most of the fasteners used are titanium.


The top triple clamp is sand cast magnesium and the bottom, machined aluminum. The forks are machined between
the top and lower triple clams and knurled at the lower clamp for better grip.


The "Thermal Flow" rear shocks were still under development. The lower bodies were sand cast in magnesium... Read More www.vintageworksbikes.com




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Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Sunday Movie

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AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer and off-road racing legend Malcolm Smith will serve as grand marshal at AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days July 9-11, 2010. Husqvarna, a brand that Malcolm helped make famous, will be honored as Marque of the Year at the event. Held in Lexington, Ohio, at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days is the premier event for vintage motorcycle enthusiasts.





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Friday, August 13, 2010

Bernie Schreiber

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Bernie Schreiber was the first – and, at the time of of his induction into the Hall of Fame in 2000, the only – Observed Trials World Champion from the United States. Schreiber was one of the all-time greats in the sport of trials, winning the world championship in 1979 and tallying 20 wins in a decade of competing in the world championships. In addition to his world title, Schreiber also won the U.S. National Trials Championships in 1978, 1982, 1983 and 1987.


Born in 1959, Schreiber started riding motorcycles at the age of 8. He began competing in trials at 10 and just five years later he was already the top-rated trials rider in his native Southern California. In a sport that rewards riding technique and experience, Schreiber developed a hard-charging style that proved to be evolutionary.


In 1977, Schreiber, riding for Bultaco, ventured into the world championships for the first time. His rookie season was a solid debut. Schreiber scored points in nine of the 12 world rounds and earned podium finishes in Spain and Germany. He ended the year ranked seventh in the world.


1978 was a breakthrough year for Schreiber. He won his first world championship event that year in France and went on to score three more wins to finish the season ranked third. During this period, Schreiber flew back to the United States to contest the non-conflicting U.S. National Trials rounds. He won the American title that year.


With the confidence he gained in 1978, Schreiber was confident he could win the world title in 1979. As usual Schreiber started off the year slowly in the early rounds, held in brutally cold conditions in Ireland, Great Britain and Belgium. The Southern Californian later would admit that he never quite got used to riding in sub-freezing temperatures... Read more thru tha AMA





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Thursday, August 12, 2010

You and the horse you ride on

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You and the horse you ride on : this is a very cool blog by Greaser Mike who says," I'm what would happen if you gave a twelve-year-old a checking account and a taste for scotch."

Photo by Lisa Weimer

Photos by Ralph Corwin

Still images taken from the film "The Thrill Is On"









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